draw over
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ó uyu ǎ NN é ng ě R, interpreted as Huairou far away, preferential care near. It means to appease the people far and near and make them return. It comes from the book of history.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of history of Shun" says, "you can be gentle and far away, but you can be gentle and far away."
Idiom usage
I'm glad to see the dragon's face. I'm glad to see the tiger's face. I'm willing to live in peace and worry about danger. Ming Dynasty, Zhang Juzheng
Analysis of Idioms
Soft and distant
Chinese PinYin : róu yuǎn néng ěr
draw over
not to do anything more than three times. shì bù guò sān
enforce justice on behalf of Heaven. tì tiān xíng dào